1 / 18

LOW-INCOME ENERGY NETWORK

LOW-INCOME ENERGY NETWORK. LIEN/AHAC Conference Helping Low Income Consumers Sarah Blackstock Income Security Advocacy Centre. Presentation outline. LIEN pyramid Energy conservation programs Rate and emergency assistance programs.

tara
Télécharger la présentation

LOW-INCOME ENERGY NETWORK

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. LOW-INCOME ENERGY NETWORK LIEN/AHAC Conference Helping Low Income Consumers Sarah Blackstock Income Security Advocacy Centre

  2. Presentation outline • LIEN pyramid • Energy conservation programs • Rate and emergency assistance programs

  3. LIEN’s approach to low-income energy conservation & assistance

  4. Benefits to Low-Income Households • lower energy bills • improve comfort/quality of life • ensure access to electricity and heat • reduce risk of homelessness • allow people with low incomes to participate in the “Culture of Conservation”

  5. Benefits for Society • reduce demand for emergency assistance • reduce need for public expenditures • reduce poverty • reduce pollution • reduce need for new generation facilities

  6. LIEN model • for low-income home-owners and tenants who pay for utilities directly • based on pyramid • Brantford Power’s pilot project “Conserving Homes” based on LIEN model

  7. Energy conservation • Ontario Energy Board • OEB encouraged Local Distribution Companies (LDCs) to develop low-income Conservation and Demand Management (CDM) • not mandatory • 33 LDCs spending approx. $9.6M

  8. Energy conservation • Social Housing Services Corporation (SHSC) • energy costs are 40% of annual operating budgets, $400M/year • Energy Management Program

  9. Energy conservation • Discretionary benefits for OW/ODSP clients • one-time benefit • maximum of $50 • to pay for pre-approved low-cost energy conservation measure

  10. Energy Conservation • Conservation Bureau • Minister of Energy gives OPA/Conservation Bureau responsibility for low-income and social housing CDM in October 2005 • target of 100MW reduction, equivalent of the energy consumption of 33 000 homes

  11. Energy Conservation • EnerGuide for Low-Income Households (EGLIGH) • cancelled by Harper gov’t in recent budget • $500M, 5-year program • available to homeowners, multiple-unit buildings and rooming houses • for retrofits such as draft-proofing, heating system upgrades and window replacements • Green Communities leading lobbying campaign to save EGLIGH

  12. Rate and emergency assistance • Federal Energy Cost Benefit • one-time benefit provided in Jan 06 • $250 to families receiving NCBS • $125 to seniors receiving GIS • $250 to senior couples where both receive GIS • 3.1M payments made

  13. Rate and emergency assistance • Provincial Emergency Energy Fund • STW/LIEN worked with ComSoc to establish fund in 2004 • fund doubled to $4.2M (April 12/06 announcement) • $500 000 to First Nations members on reserve • managed by municipalities and the Ontario Native Welfare Administrators’ Association on behalf of First Nations

  14. Rate and emergency assistance • Provincial Emergency Energy Fund con’t • to help pay for arrears, security deposits, reconnections • paid directly to energy providers • can access fund once, unless there are exceptional circumstances • amount provided depends on factors such as number of months energy has been disconnected and reconnection fees

  15. Rate and emergency assistance • Ontario Home Electricity Relief program • legislation introduced in April 06 to provide low-income families with a one-time payment • up to $120 per family • to be eligible families have to file 2005 tax returns by Dec. 31, 2006 • 1.5M families will be eligible

  16. Rate and emergency assistance • Social assistance • SA recipients who pay for heating costs directly can receive assistance a part of their shelter allowance • Community Start-up and Maintainenace Benefit

  17. Rate and emergency assistance • Charities • Share the Warmth (not in all communities) • Winter Warmth (United Way, Toronto Hydro and Enbridge) • municipal programs • churches • varying levels of assistance • varying critieria

  18. Being warm, cool and green • Role of government • Role of utilities • Role of activists

More Related